Monday 27 February 2017

Manchester United Wins EFL Cup Final at Wembley Stadium

Manchester United Football Club on Sunday won the EFL Cup final 2017 after defeating. Southampton 3-2. Zlatan Ibrahimovic scored twice, including netting the winner three minutes from time, to help Manchester United beat Southampton 3-2 and win the 2017 EFL Cup final at Wembley Stadium on Sunday.
Southampton were missing top centre-back Virgil van Dijk and leading striker Charlie Austin. Saints chief Claude Puel also left Shane Manchester United wins EFLCup Final after trashing Southampton 3-2 Long on the bench, trusting Nathan Redmond in support of Gabbiadini.

Monday 28 November 2016

FICTION:A man worth waiting for....episode 13

A Story written by Omolola…
“Never.” She stared up at the stars, trying to make sense out of that quirk. Trying to understand why her mother hadn’t ever called her father. And why she’d gone to such lengths to make sure Tomilola never did, either. “Maybe she felt like too much of a loser after a relationship failed and she just wanted to put it behind her, pretend it never happened. Or maybe, after being tossed from one foster family to the next as a kid, she thought further contact was futile. Whatever the reason, I never saw any of them again. In fact, we usually moved to a different town after a breakup. Although that could just as well have had to do with her trying to make sure my father never found us.”
“You’ve been thinking about the name change thing?”
She nodded. “When you put all the pieces together, it certainly looks like she was making sure he didn’t find us. Maybe she was afraid he’d take me away. Maybe. . . I don’t know.” Her brain was too numb to think anymore. “You have to realize that with her gone, you may never understand her motivations for everything she did.”
Sadness washed through her, “I know.”
“It sounds like you moved around a lot. Did you like it? Seeing new places?” Having forced her to face some of the hard truths of her past, he changed the subject, steering her on to easier ground. And she was glad for it. “I hated it. Mom wasn’t the only one who dreamed about having a house. A home. Before she got sick, even after sometimes, Mom and I used to talk about having our own house.”
She smiled thinking of those times. “We’d plan it all out, you know? First, we’d decide what kind it was. A one-story ranch or a two-story contemporary or just a little grandma house on a quiet corner. Then we’d decorate it. Plan what kind of curtains we’d have in the kitchen. And where we’d put the garden. We always planned a garden.”
“Garden?”
She nodded, laughing.
“You wanted roses.”
“Yes. Red roses, mind you. They had to be red.” She smiled, remembering. “It was fun, planning. Dreaming.” “But you never had a house of your own?”
“Are you kidding? There were times when we couldn’t even afford a cheap hotel. There was one time, though, when Mom was dating this guy with money. Not money like this.” She waved her hand, indicating the Big W. “But enough money he could help pay the rent and have a little left over for a few fun things. A night out at the galleria, an afternoon at the beach. Anyway, Mom and I bought some material and hand stitched some kitchen curtains for the tiny apartment we were renting at the time. That was cool.”
“Sounds…cool.”
She shot him a sideways glance. “You don’t think it sounds cool. You think it sounds pitiful.”
“Not pitiful. But…hard.”
She shrugged. “It was sometimes. But I had my mom. I always knew she loved me.”
“Your father loved you, too.” He locked his gaze on hers. “And he was looking for you, Tomi. He – was – looking.”
A million emotions pounded through her. Pain, frustration, loss. “Yes, it looks like he was. And I’m softeniing toward him. But I’d be lying if I said I didn’t feel guilty about it.”
“That’s understandable, if not exactly fair. You’ve thought negatively about your father for twenty-two years; that isn’t going to change overnight. Particularly since your father’s version of what happened that night isn’t any prettier than your mother’s.”
“No, it’s not,” Her voice was as weary as she felt. “But…I would suggest you think very hard abut cutting your dad out of your life just because your mom did. You need to find a way to let them both into your heart.” He stood, pulled a small envelope from his back pocket and handed it to her. “Your dad left this for you. I don’t know what’s in there. But maybe it will help.” He stood and headed for the end of the balcony.
She stared at the envelope, then at his retreating back. The need to call him back danced on her tongue. She didn’t want to be alone. It seemed as if she’d faced every scary moment of her life alone. She didn’t want to face this one that way, too.
Unfortunately, she was afraid to think where her current vulnerability coupled with the S#xual tension between them might lead if her father’s missive upset her and Demola decided to hold her again. Demola might have the wherewithal to keep things in check, to keep things at a comforting level, but she was pretty sure she didn’t. So she clamped her mouth shut and watched him walk away.
Just before he headed down the stairs, he stopped and turned to her. “You said you’ve always wanted a home. This could be your home, Tomi. It’s a beautiful place. A good place.”
Old longing rushed in, but only for a moment. She shook her head. “I don’t think so, Demola. My mother’s memory aside, this place is too rich for my taste. I could never own anything this lavish. There are too many people out there doing without.”
He shrugged. “So downsize. Or make the place work for you. Your dad plowed the money the estate made back into the place so he’d have something grand to bring you and your mom back to if he found you. But you don’t have to do the same. Stop growing the place and use the money for your charity. Or whatever else you’d like to use it for.”
The idea slid through her, sneaking underneath her confusion and pain to tease her, tempt her. She liked the idea of having a steady income to use for her charity. But….could she make enough peace with the past to make this her home?
“Just something to think about,” he pointed out.
She shot him a wry smile. “Like I need more of that.”
He returned the smile. “I”ll see you tomorrow.”
Without another word, he disappeared down the stairs. She looked at the envelope clutched in her hand.
A card.
From her father.
Mouth dry, heart pounding, she broke the seal and pulled the card out with shaking fingers. Opening it, she angled her body so the small amount of light coming from her bedroom fell on the card, highlighting the boldly scrawled words. Holding her breath, she read.
[i]Tomilola,
I’ve composed a dozen notes. All of them from my heart, but most of them were long-winded and did more to appease my conscience than anything else. Now I’ve decided to say only the things that matter.
I’ve missed you. . .more than I can ever tell.
I love you. . .more than you will ever know.
I’ll be watching from above, or perhaps below, doing what I couldn’t in life. . .taking care of you.
Love,
Dad.
She closed her eyes against the words. Words she would have sold her soul as a child to hear. Words that would have made so many dark, scary nights so much more bearable. Words that pierced her heart like a thousand knives, because they’d come so, so late.
Tears sprang to her eyes.
And this time she let them fall.


To Be Continued…

FICTION: A man worth waiting for.... episode 12

A Story written by Omolola…
Tomilola sat outside her bedroom on the balcony that ran the length of the back of the house. She rocked gently in one of the rockers that were strewn around the balcony and drew in a deep breath, trying to calm her nerves as she leaned back, propped her feet up on the railing and watched the sun dip beneath the hill’s top. The already waning twilight faded to night. Staring at the twinkling stars, she let the day’s emotions take hold of her.
Fresh tears pooled in her eyes. Tears she’d been fighting all day. Tears of frustration and sadness and anger. After Demola’s little bombshell on the trail, she’d come back to the estate and spent the day sifting through the bills in her father’s office. It had made for a tumultuous afternoon.
Footsteps echoed in the dark.
She quickly swiped at the tears and glanced toward the edge of the house where the sound of crunching gravel reverberated through the night. Who was wandering back here? The sound of crunching gravel turned into that of someone climbing the stairs at the end of the balcony. Demola’s head appeared as he made his way up the steps, the moonlight glinting off the sharp angles and planes of his face.
She looked heavenward, praying for strength. “Demola, I’m not sure I’m up for another one of your surprises. Seems like every time you appear on the horizon, my world gets a little shakier.” He stepped onto the balcony and held up his hands, a bottle in one, two shot glasses in the other. “No surprises Just thought a good stiff drink would go down good about now.”
“A little anesthetic for the havoc you created earlier?” He winced, striding over to her and setting the bottle and glasses on the rail. “Something like that.” She drew a deep breath, feeling guilty for dumping her bad mood on him. “Sorry. I’m shooting the messenger, I know. But, unfortunately, the two people I want to be taking over the coals right now aren’t here. And -”
“I am,” He extracted a lime and small knife from his shirt pocket and set them on the railing. She nodded.
He removed a saltshaker from his front jeans pocket and put it next to the line. “That’s okay. I can take it.”
Yes, he seemed to have as much inner strength as outer strength. He absorbed all the anger she threw his way with the calm acceptance of a man who had a bone-deep understanding of the world around him and where he belonged in it. And because she had never known where she belonged in this world, it was a quality that made him just that much more appealing.
Too damned appealing. Squelching those thoughts, she concentrated on the bottle in his hand. Red Label. Of course. She curled her free hand into a soft fist and poured herself a glass.
She waited while he got his own drink ready, then held her glass up in toast. “To a quiet, uneventful day tomorrow.”
“Hear! Hear!” He clinked his shot glass to hers. They both licked the salt from their hands, drowned their shots and bit into their limes. The liquor rocketed down her throat, hit her stomach and raced into her bloodstream. She rocked back, closing her eyes, letting the warmth slide through her. Letting the alcohol relax the muscles along the back of her neck, the tight knot in her stomach and chest.
Something clinked against the lip of her glass. She opened her eyes to find Demola pouring her another shot. “Easy, I’m not much of a drinker.”
“Just sip at this one.” He set the bottle down, she held her hand out. He proceeded to pour himself another shot and downed it without the salt and lime embellishments. She raised a brow. Had this day been as unpleasant for him as it had for her? Maybe. While she’d been certain from the moment she’d met him that he was determined to do whatever was required to fulfil his obligation to her father, including playing dirty, she didn’t think he liked making her unhappy.
She touched the end of her tongue and took a tiny sip of the drink as he filled his shot glass again. He obviously planned to stay awhile. “You going to pull up a rocker or just tower over me while we drink?” He pulled one of the other rockers alongside hers, grabbed his drink, sat and propped his feet next to hers on the railing. “Pretty out here tonight.”
She stared at the full moon hanging over the distant hills. “I will give dear Dad that. He picked a beautiful place to build his little empire.” Demola winced but he didn’t say anything. He just sat, quietly rocking, occasionally sipping at his drink, his shirt gently brushing her arm as his chair moved slowly back and forth, his heat seeping into her shoulder like a warm, tantalizing breeze.
Her traitorous gaze slid to his boots, ran up his long, denim-clad legs and settled at the masculine bulge at the top of those legs. Oh, man. She dragged her eyes off him and took another fortifying swallow of red label.
Demola took a sip of his own drink, then turned his gaze on her. “You want to talk about the estate? Or your dad? You must have a million questions.” He was back to pushing again. She slanted him a look “What if I say no?”
“Then we’ll just sit here, watch the moon climb up the sky.”
She laughed. “And how long do you think you’ll be able to do that before you break down and bring the subject up again?”
He smiled, rocking gently in his chair “Maybe a minute or two.”
“If I’m lucky.” Her thoughts slid back to the troubling questions that had plagued her all afternoon. “My mom was raised in group and foster homes, did you know that?”
He looked over at her, the moon’s silvery light highlighting and shadowing his face. “I didn’t know.”
“Her parents were killed in an automobile accident when she was eight.” She closed her eyes, thinking how tiny, how vulnerable a little girl of eight was. “Her father and mother didn’t have any family that could take her in. So my mother became a ward of the state.”
“And she was never adopted?”
“Nope. She used to dream of it. Said once she recovered from her parents’ deaths, she’d lay awake nights and fantasize about a couple coming along and falling in love with her, adopting her and bringing her home. More than anything else in the world, she wanted a home and someone to love her.”
“But it didn’t happen?”
“No. And it left a hole in her, I think. Made her desperate for someone’s love. Which is what I don’t understand. If my father loved her, why’d she play around on him?”
He shrugged philosophically. “The Big W was a new estate then; your father was just starting to build it. If she was needy for attention, maybe he didn’t have enough time for her. Maybe she felt neglected,”
She thought of all the men who’d come and gone in her mother’s life. “Maybe, God knows, when Mom was with a man she wanted all his attention. Needed all his attention. She even hated it when they went to work. I think its why most of the guys left. They knew whatever they gave would never be enough.”
“So you’re at least entertaining the thought your mother might have contributed to what happened all those years ago.”
“I’m entertaining the idea. But I still have reservations.”
He watched her, his gaze concerned and sympathetic. “What’s bothering you the most?”
“If my mom never intended to ask for my dad’s help, why did she pretend to call? Why tell me she was going to call?”
“I don’t know. Maybe just to make your dad look bad. It wouldn’t be the first time one spouse vilified another.”
“Maybe.” But that answer didn’t ease the turmoil roiling inside her.
“Is it that she pretended to call that bothers you, or that she so obviously didn’t want help from your dad?”
“The latter, I think. It just seems so…self-destructive.” She thought back, the faces of several men flashing through her head. Men that had been involved with her mother, sometimes for months. She sighed, dropping her head back against the rocker. “But now that I think about it, self-destructive is a pretty good way to describe Mom’s relationships. Most of the men she brought home were users. Takers. And once there was no more to take, they left.”
“Did she ever see any of them again? After they left? Try to rekindle the relationship?”
Now there was a provoking bunch of questions. “No, she didn’t. As much as my mother wanted to be loved. As much as she wanted a man to come into her life and stay, if things didn’t work out, it was over. Completely over. Once they left our house or we left theirs, she never saw them again. Not to settle up on old bills or for a cup of coffee or for anything.”
“She never saw them again?” Surprise sounded in his voice.


To Be Continued…

FICTION: A man worth waiting for.... episode 11

A Story Written by Omolola…
Demola rode quietly beside Tomilola. They were in the open now. The morning was quickly warming up as the sun rose steadily above the horizon.
“I thought you’d like it here. It’s one of my favourite spots. Was one of your dad’s, too.”
She grimaced. “Can we not talk about him today?”
His gut clenched. The pleasant ride was over. “Unfortunately, we need to talk about him. Him and your mom.”
Her gaze snapped back to him, her lips pressed into a thin, hard line. “You jerk. You didn’t bring me out here for fresh air. You brought me out here to ambush me.”
“I brought you out here because I thought you might enjoy some fresh air while we talked.” She snorted at his excuse.
He sighed. “Fine. I ambushed you. But, this is a mountain we have to get over. And it’s been my experience that when you’re facing something unpleasant, sooner is better than later.”
“Not today it isn’t.”
“Running away won’t make the problem disappear.”
She shot him a black scowl. “No. But it might make you disappear.” She turned to leave.
“An ambush is used when you want to take something from someone or hurt them. I don’t want to do either. But we have some hard things to talk about, and I need you to stay around while we do. So yes, I stacked the deck in my favor. Shoot me.”
“I told you yesterday I didn’t want you trying to justify my father to me. I haven’t changed my mind.”
“I’m not going to justify anyone to you. I’m simply going to relate the story your father told me about what happened twenty-two years ago. What you want to do with that information is up to you.”
“I already know what happened. On a dark, rainy night, my father kicked my mother and me out of his house and told her he never wanted to see us again.”
“Correction, your father kicked your mother out, he never intended she should take you with her. And. . .”
“And you think that’s okay? A man kicking his wife out of their house in the middle of the night with nothing but the clothes on her back?” Outrage sounded in her voice. Outrage she had every right to feel.
“No, I don’t. It was a bad decision. One made in a drunken rage. One your father regretted every day of his life from that night forward.”
“Oh, please. If the man regretted his actions, he had plenty of opportunity to make up for them. Do you have any idea how many times my mother called him, asking for help?”
This was the lie at the center of Tomilola’s anger for her father. The misconception he had to break. The misconception that was going to send her world spinning. He braced himself for the fight and shook his head. “She never called, Tomilola. That’s what I was trying to tell you in the truck yesterday when you cut me off. After your mother took you that night and left, your father never heard from her again.”
“That’s a lie. She called. Time and time again, asking for money. Asking for help. And Wale Adeyemi always told her to get lost.”
“Were you ever in the room when she called? Did you over hear the calls? Or did she just tell you about them?”
“Of course I heard them.” Righteous indignation sounded in her voice.
But he suspected she’d answered more out of anger and reflex than truth. “Are you sure? Think hard.”
She sent him another fuming stare, but he could see the doubt sweeping into her thoughts.
He let her ponder a bit, praying her mother hadn’t put on some charade where she’d talked into a phone with God knew whom or what on the other end, making her daughter think she was talking to her dad. It would be a harder lie to combat. Not that he couldn’t combat it. But he’d like to use as small a hammer as possible.
He sat quietly, the sound of grass and the soft creak of leather wafting on the warming breeze. A hawk’s lonely cry drifted down from the clear blue sky. He glanced up, spotting the majestic bird gliding playfully on the thermals overhead.
Tomilola followed his gaze, spotting the bird immediately. She smiled, a smile that momentarily erased the shadows from her eyes. The hawk suddenly dove toward the ground, his beak leading the way, his wings tucked tight against his body. Just before reaching the grass, he flared his wings and reached forward with his feet. A split second later he was winging toward the sky again, a mouse dangling helplessly from deadly claws.
Tomilola lowered her gaze to his, the shadows flitting back into her eyes. “It’s never quite as idyllic as we want to believe, is it?”
He shook his head. “No.”
She exhaled a long sigh. “I don’t actually remember if I heard any of my mother’s calls or not. But that doesn’t mean I didn’t. My mother died seven years ago, and we’d given up on my father coming to our aid a couple years before that. It was a long time ago. But what could possibly have been the point of her lying to me? She needed help. Desperately. We needed help. Why wouldn’t she have called?”
“I don’t know. But from what your dad told me your mom had issues. Ones your dad said kept her from thinking rationally sometimes.”
Pain and anger slashed across her face. “She might have had ‘issues.’ And she might not have always thought ‘rationally,’ but she wasn’t delusional, for pity’s sake. She was together enough that she never turned back on her little girl. Unlike the man you’re trying to paint as a bloody saint.”
“I’m not trying to paint anyone as a saint Least of all your father. God knows, he’d turn over in his grave if he thought I was. I’m just trying to tell his side of the story.”
“Then tell it. But don’t expect me to believe every word out of your mouth.”
“All I’m asking is that you listen with an open mind.”
“Fine, my mind is open.”
If the underlying anger in her words was any indication, her mind wasn’t open. But since it was likely all he’d get, he’d best get to it. “Did your mother ever tell you why he threw her off the estate?”
Her lips twisted in disgust. “Said he found someone new. Someone younger, prettier. Someone without a toddler to take care of.” Pain sounded in her words as she voiced her belief that her father didn’t want her. He locked his gaze on hers. “Your father never considered you anything but the most wonderful of gifts, Tomilola. Never.”
Tears gathered in her eyes. “How would you know? You weren’t. . .”
“No. I wasn’t there. But I know because I saw the pain and longing in your dad’s eyes every time he spoke of you. Heard the pride in his voice when he’d tell one of the memories he had of you. Memories that were old and few, but more precious to him than anything in this world.”
More moisture filled her eyes, but she didn’t let the tears fall. She might want to believe her father had missed her. But the anger underneath those tears told him she didn’t. Not yet. And it would take a lot more talking on Demola’s part before she’d even consider opening her mind. “It wasn’t your father who found someone new, Tomilola. It was your mother.”
“Oh, come on, you can come up with something more original than just flipping the story around, can’t you?”
“Yeah, I probably could if I was making it up. But I’m not making it up. I’m going to tell you exactly what your father told me. No embellishments to make your father sound more innocent. No assumptions about what I think anyone was thinking that night. You’ll have to decide for yourself what you want to believe and what you don’t.”
“Fine. So my mother found someone new Who was that?” Pure sarcasm sounded in her voice.
“I don’t know his name. He was one of your father’s workers.”
“That’s convenient for the story.”
He ignored the comment and pushed on. “It was a Saturday night and your father had let half the workers go early so they could enjoy themselves while he worked late with the other half. When he finally got home, he found you in your crib, Mariam, the housekeeper, watching you, and your mother gone. When he asked Mariam where your mother was, she said she’d headed to town with the first half of the workers. He wasn’t worried at first, too worried, anyway. It wasn’t the first time your mother had gotten impatient with him for being late and headed into town early to drink and dance with some of the workers.”
Her lips pressed into a thin line.
Did that mean she recognized the behavior? And didn’t approve? Wale had said Nike was a big party girl. That she craved attention. Especially male attention. There was no reason that would have changed after she left Wale. In fact, it very possibly could  have gotten worse.
But speculating about what Tomilola was thinking wouldn’t get him anywhere. “When he got to the bar, your mom wasn’t there. Just a bunch of guys doing their best to avoid your dad. When he finally pinned one down, the man reluctantly told him your mom had left with one of the new workers. Supposedly just to check out a bar farther down the street, one that played disco instead of rock music.


To Be Continued…

Dangote Group Graduate Job Recruitment 2016

Dangote Group Graduate Job Recruitment 2016 | 
The Dangote Group is a diversified and fully integrated conglomerate with interests across a range of sectors in Nigeria and Africa. Current interests include Cement, Sugar, Flour, Salt, Pasta, Beverages, Noodles, Poly Products, Transportation and Real Estate, Oil and Gas, Telecommunication, Fertilizer and Steel sector of the economy.
Dangote Group continues to grow its vision of becoming the leading provider of essential needs in Food and Shelter in Sub-Saharan Africa with sustained market leadership in Cement Manufacturing, Sugar Milling, Sugar Refining, Flour Milling, Manufacturing of Pasta (Spaghetti & Macaroni), Operation of Cement Terminals, Port Operations, Noodles Manufacturing, Packaging Material Production and Salt Refining.

Dangote Group Graduate Job Recruitment 2016

The Group requires the services of exceptional and highly motivated professionals to fill the following positions below:

1. Graduate Laboratory Analyst Recruitment at Dangote Group

Job Title: Laboratory Analyst
Location: 
Lagos
Job Responsibilities
  • Carrying out daily chemical analysis using standard operating procedures (S.O.Ps)
  • Preparation of solutions
  • Calibration of equipment used for laboratory analysis
  • Taking corrective actions when results deviate from the standards.
  • Attending to SON and NAFDAC on official visits.
  • Reporting of inconsistencies , malfunctions or variations from prototype
  • Written explanations of flaws
  • Following and ensuring strict safety procedures and safety checks.
  • Maintains simple laboratory records and inventory for supplies and reagents.
  • Recommendation of new and revised methods for production efficiency
  • Carrying out routine task accurately and following strict methodologies to carry out analyses
  • Ensuring the laboratory is well stocked and resourced
  • Maintains laboratory equipment and supplies by cleaning and marinating quality assurance records
Competence Requirements
  • Knowledge of FDA, GMP, SOP, HACCP, ISO, Sanitation, chemical safety, pest control, food allergens plus kosher requirements
  • Strong industry experience
  • Excellent technical report writing and oral communication skills
  • Excellent interpersonal skills
  • Detail orientation
  • Strategic thinking
  • Time managements skills
  • Confident independent abilities and team – focused mentality
  • Strong analytical and numerical skills
Educational Qualification
  • B.Sc/HND in Chemistry, Food Science or Biochemistry.

Job Title: Head, Health Safety and Environmental – National Salt Company of Nigeria Plc. (NASCON)

Locations: Lagos – NASCON Head Office/Oregun plant
Type: Permanent
Business Unit/Department: NASCON (Dangote Salt BU)
Reporting to: Managing director/ CEO NASCON. Dotted line to group HSSE (Dangote industries limited HQ, Ikoyi Lagos)
Direct Reports: NASCON Site HSE Managers.
Job Purpose
  • With responsibility for the growth, development and mentoring of the team, a key requirement is the proven ability to clear NASCON HSE strategic direction, continuously improving HSE Performance while maintaining compliance with DIL Group HSSE Policies, standards and guidance ensuring all HSE programs, procedures, training, work practices and controls are effectively implemented. Drive HSE leadership across NASCON.
Job Responsibilities
  • Provide for a clearly defined HSE management system for NASCON to identify and define the processes and procedures requires by regulation and group HSSE to protect the health and safety of employees, subcontractors, customers and the environment.
  • Define the HSE competency framework to which employees should be working to within NASCON ensuring personnel are fully aware of risks associated with their work environment, in line with the above and DIL aligned.
  • Ensure that adequate training is set up (workshops where appropriate) in the line with the competency framework.
  • Provide an enhanced management system for high risk areas with NASCON, E.g. Plant, food and process safety with relevant guidance and training for operational team to adhere to.
  • Drive the effort to embed the behavioral standard in NASCON.
  • Lead an effective audit program to include identification of breaches to company policies and correct of “at-risk” conditions and/or behaviours.
  • Introduce a regime of regular inspections and monitoring as part of compliance verification using relevant subject matters experts (SMEs). Monitor exposure risks for employees. Check adequacy of controls and work with operational team to address gaps and /or deficiencies in the system.
  • Working with the operational management team, implement programs and processes that increase overall employee development engagement and retention in the area of HSE.
  • Ensure a robust change management system in place to capture all safety related risks and associated controls to ensure layers of protection are maintained.
Working with operational team agree:
  • Leading and lagging KPIs that are suitable and sufficient for PMP EMA and globally aligned:
  • Annual improvement plans around HSE.
  • TRACK Leading and lagging KPIs and report back to high level operational management, especially around corrective action mgt.
  • Ensure a robust HSE related investigations and follow up is in place for all sites.
  • Demonstrate strong leadership skills in driving accountability with the operational teams through effective communication to ensure compliance as a minimum but also drive encourage excellence in the area of HSE.
  • Provide strategic vision for the future of NASCON, outlining areas of weakness, ensuring actions plans are in place, including involvement in and active encouragement of capital planning around HSE related improvements.
  • Provide HSE reports for the NASCON leadership team, external stakeholders and incorporate any recommendations/comments emerging from the review of the report.
  • Promote, support and monitor occupational health in co-operation with the HR team so that a holistic approach to managing work-related health issues is embedded.
  • Work closely with the group HSSE to embed the BU HSE strategy. Ensure ongoing interactions with group HSSE and other Bus HSE colleagues to ensure group HSSE alignment and sharing of best practice and learning.
Keys Skills and Experience Required
  • Excellent technical capabilities, very good working knowledge of applicable H&S legislation, occupational health and safety hazards identification and risk assessment, occupational health and safety accident and illness prevention and protection techniques and international standards.
  • Strong knowledge of occupational health and safety and process safety issues related to one or more of the industry sectors relevant to Dangote industries limited and a mature and level-headed approach to business;
  • Possess a style of clear and effective communication, both oral and written. Very good level of cross cultural communication skills including public relations, negotiation, liaison, mentoring, information sharing and conflict resolution;
  • Be able to differentiate between negligible H&S issues of possible material impact. Know when and how to involve appropriate legal and technical personnel within and outside the company to address and issues;
  • Have the skills and attitude to act in a proactive manner to anticipate problems and solve existing problems in the context of operational requirements and H&s regulatory constraints;
  • Able to listen to opinions, formulate recommendations in a confident and constructive manner;
  • Project management, negotiation/dispute mitigation and presentation skills
Work Context
  • The areas of HSE have broadly defined polices at corporate and group level. The challenge of this role is to both: collaborate with peers in the other sites in further developing and enhancing these broadly defined policies as well as translating them into strategic objectives to drive NASCON business improvement in HSE. The job involves a high level of persuasion, influencing and negotiation skills.
Qualification/knowledge/Experience
  • Bachelor’s degree or equivalent in Science, Engineering or Environmental related discipline
  • Advanced degree preferred;
  • Member of an internationally recognized environmental/safety/health professional body preferred. (E.g. IOSH, CMIOSH advantageous) – Chartered health and safety practitioner preferred.
  • Knowledge and experience of working in an engineering, food processing, chemical and/ or pharmaceutical environment.
  • Demonstrable experience in the application of HSE management systems.
  • Proven experience in the supervision/management of professional and administrative staff.
  • Track record in influencing positive organizational; change inside organization;
  • Development and implementation of integrated management systems according to  international; standards e.g ISO 14001, OHSAS18001 (ISO 45001) and ISO 22000 international standards
Skills
  • The Candidate must be able to demonstrate that they have the following:
  • Ability to persuade and influence successfully at all levels of the business
  • Strong communication skills at all levels and across all disciplines
  • System literate

Job Title: Quality Control Supervisor
Location: 
Lagos


Job Responsibilities

  • Supervise quality control technicians and sanitation crew and assesses the performance of sanitation crew.
  • Helps QA/QC Manager in the development, coordination and supervision of OA/QC program such as food safety, HACCP, GMPs, food defense, pre-requisite programs, etc.
  • Supervises HACCP Program, is part of the HACCP team. Helps in the implementation, documenting and monitoring this system with the help of cross-departmental team and QA/QC Manager.
  • Monitors, verifies and documents SOPs related to product quality standards, food safety, and sanitation.
  • Supervises the production of consistent quality products through the development and enforcement of excellent manufacturing practices and procedures.
  • Helps in communicating product safety and quality standards to company personnel
  • Gives support in coordinating all quality and food safety-related activities including process and testing
  • Monitor the production environment to identify areas where quality or safety procedures can be implemented or improved.
  • Communicates the management manufacturing processes and compliance with standards deviations.
  • Supervises that all QC instruments are up to date and calibrated (water meters, scales, thermometers, metal detectors, gas analyzers)
  • Helps in koshers supervision
  • Assists in the development of new products.
  • Helps in all audits- internal and external.
  • Supervises final; product microbiological, chemical and sensory sampling.
  • Helps in training, coaching, mentoring, empowering and developing team members. This includes coordinating team involvement activities to drive “continuous quality improvement” processes.
  • Conducts relevant training and education on food safety, quality systems ad procedures.
  • Maintains update and improve quality manuals and HACCP Plan.
  • Follows up customer complaints and works together with management to reduce complaints
Competence Requirements
  • Knowledge of FDA,GMP, SOP, HACCP, ISO, Sanitation, chemical safety, pest control, food allergens plus kosher requirements.
  • Excellent technical report writing and oral communication skills
  • Excellent interpersonal ad IT skills
  • Details orientation
  • Good numerical skills and an understanding of statistics
  • Time management skills
  • Confident independent abilities and team – focused mentality
  • Strong analytics and leaderships skills.
  • Problem solving and troubleshooting capabilities
  • Planning and organization skills
  • Proficient with Microsoft office
Educational Qualification
  • A B.Sc/HND in Chemistry, Food Science or Microbiology, or any Bachelor’s Degree with appropriate QA experience

How to Apply Dangote Group Graduate Job Recruitment 2016

Interested and qualified candidates should send their CV’s and Cover letter (with the relevant position included in the subject line of their email) to: careers@dangote.com
Application Closing Date
30th November, 2016.

Apply Now For Hilton Worldwide 2017 Finesse Graduate Programme – EMEA


Apply Now For Hilton Worldwide 2017 Finesse Graduate Programme – EMEA

Hilton Worldwide is one of the largest and fastest growing hospitality companies in the world, with more than 4,700 hotels, resorts and timeshare properties comprising more than 775,000 rooms in 104 countries and territories.

In the nearly 100 years since our founding, we have defined the hospitality industry and established a portfolio of 13 world-class brands, including our flagship Hilton Hotels & Resorts brand, which is the most recognized hotel brand in the world. Our premier brand portfolio also includes Waldorf Astoria Hotels & Resorts, Conrad Hotels & Resorts, Canopy by Hilton, Curio – A Collection by Hilton, DoubleTree by Hilton, Embassy Suites by Hilton, Hilton Garden Inn, Hampton by Hilton, Tru by Hilton, Homewood Suites by Hilton, Home2 Suites by Hilton and Hilton Grand Vacations. We have more than 55 million members in our award–winning customer loyalty program, Hilton HHonors.



What is the aim of the Programme?

The Finesse programme aims to develop a group of talented, internationally mobile Finance people and fast track them to Finance Director positions within 5-8 years of starting the Programme.

What will I do?

Finesse consists of a 24-month training programme which encompasses two international 12-month placements in our hotels. During your placements, you will gain all-round Finance experience whilst working in all the main Finance functions. You will also gain exposure in the other key functional areas of Operations, Business Development and Human Resources. You will participate in off-the-job training and have business driven projects to complete. Following successful completion of this 2 year programme you will then be assigned into a full-time Finance role in year 3.
During Finesse your progress is constantly assessed, so you always know how you are developing. As the programme is so flexible, it will take into account all training that you have had to date and build on it, rather than making you repeat things unnecessarily.
Where will I be?
The location of your placements will depend on availability and could be anywhere within the Europe, Middle East and Africa region (subject to Visa restrictions etc.)
Learning & Development:
The key focus here will be for you to complete the CIMA (Chartered Institute of Management Accountants) Professional Finance qualification. This is a highly regarded professional qualification with global recognition in the Finance profession. This process will be supported by Hilton in terms of both funding and learning support. The CIMA qualification typically takes 3 years to complete, so this will be completed during your first 2 placements and then completed in your 3rd year whilst working full-time within one of our hotel operations. During your 24-month training you will also take part in a number of other face-to-face training courses focused on other business competence areas. As a Finesse participant you will also have access to the Hilton University, our on-line learning and development tool, through which you can complete e-learning courses, learn a language on-line and make use of our on-line business library.
Support all the Way:
Finesse participants are supported throughout their career progression with the Finesse Mentoring Programme where senior managers within Hilton take on the role of Mentors.
Are you someone who is Smart? Passionate? Ambitious?
These are the questions that we ask any potential candidate before they apply to the Finesse
Programme.
Job Requirements:
• You must have a Bachelors Degree or equivalent in a Finance, Accounting or related subject
• You must speak, read and write English fluently. A second language (i.e. Arab, Russian or Turkish) is considered an advantage.
• You must be willing/able/eligible to live and work in the Europe, Middle East and Africa Region
• You must be fully mobile within the 2 year programme to join your 2 placement hotels
• You must have the desire to become a Finance Director within Hilton.
• We will accept both internal and external candidates as long as the above criteria apply
• You must have graduated within the period of July 2015 until August 2017.
How to Apply
Interested and qualified candidates should Click Here to Apply
Application Deadline: 30th December 2016

Sunday 27 November 2016

PHOTO: Miss Angola wins the first edition of Miss Africa in calabar



The beauty pageant with the theme “Green Economy, a tool for Sustainable Development” took place in Calabar, Cross River State. 18 African countries participated in the contest. Miss Cameroon, Miss Angola, Miss South Africa, Miss Tanzania and Miss Namibia made it to the top five.

Neurite Mendes of Angola emerged the winner of the first edition of Miss Africa. Miss South Africa and Miss Cameroon were the first and second runner-ups respectively.

Miss Angola is going home with a brand new 2016 Ford Escape and $25000

see more photos:
                                               


FICTION: A man worth waiting for..... episode 11

A Story Written by Omolola…
Demola rode quietly beside Tomilola. They were in the open now. The morning was quickly warming up as the sun rose steadily above the horizon.
“I thought you’d like it here. It’s one of my favourite spots. Was one of your dad’s, too.”
She grimaced. “Can we not talk about him today?”
His gut clenched. The pleasant ride was over. “Unfortunately, we need to talk about him. Him and your mom.”
Her gaze snapped back to him, her lips pressed into a thin, hard line. “You jerk. You didn’t bring me out here for fresh air. You brought me out here to ambush me.”
“I brought you out here because I thought you might enjoy some fresh air while we talked.” She snorted at his excuse.
He sighed. “Fine. I ambushed you. But, this is a mountain we have to get over. And it’s been my experience that when you’re facing something unpleasant, sooner is better than later.”
“Not today it isn’t.”
“Running away won’t make the problem disappear.”
She shot him a black scowl. “No. But it might make you disappear.” She turned to leave.
“An ambush is used when you want to take something from someone or hurt them. I don’t want to do either. But we have some hard things to talk about, and I need you to stay around while we do. So yes, I stacked the deck in my favor. Shoot me.”
“I told you yesterday I didn’t want you trying to justify my father to me. I haven’t changed my mind.”
“I’m not going to justify anyone to you. I’m simply going to relate the story your father told me about what happened twenty-two years ago. What you want to do with that information is up to you.”
“I already know what happened. On a dark, rainy night, my father kicked my mother and me out of his house and told her he never wanted to see us again.”
“Correction, your father kicked your mother out, he never intended she should take you with her. And. . .”
“And you think that’s okay? A man kicking his wife out of their house in the middle of the night with nothing but the clothes on her back?” Outrage sounded in her voice. Outrage she had every right to feel.
“No, I don’t. It was a bad decision. One made in a drunken rage. One your father regretted every day of his life from that night forward.”
“Oh, please. If the man regretted his actions, he had plenty of opportunity to make up for them. Do you have any idea how many times my mother called him, asking for help?”
This was the lie at the center of Tomilola’s anger for her father. The misconception he had to break. The misconception that was going to send her world spinning. He braced himself for the fight and shook his head. “She never called, Tomilola. That’s what I was trying to tell you in the truck yesterday when you cut me off. After your mother took you that night and left, your father never heard from her again.”
“That’s a lie. She called. Time and time again, asking for money. Asking for help. And Wale Adeyemi always told her to get lost.”
“Were you ever in the room when she called? Did you over hear the calls? Or did she just tell you about them?”
“Of course I heard them.” Righteous indignation sounded in her voice.
But he suspected she’d answered more out of anger and reflex than truth. “Are you sure? Think hard.”
She sent him another fuming stare, but he could see the doubt sweeping into her thoughts.
He let her ponder a bit, praying her mother hadn’t put on some charade where she’d talked into a phone with God knew whom or what on the other end, making her daughter think she was talking to her dad. It would be a harder lie to combat. Not that he couldn’t combat it. But he’d like to use as small a hammer as possible.
He sat quietly, the sound of grass and the soft creak of leather wafting on the warming breeze. A hawk’s lonely cry drifted down from the clear blue sky. He glanced up, spotting the majestic bird gliding playfully on the thermals overhead.
Tomilola followed his gaze, spotting the bird immediately. She smiled, a smile that momentarily erased the shadows from her eyes. The hawk suddenly dove toward the ground, his beak leading the way, his wings tucked tight against his body. Just before reaching the grass, he flared his wings and reached forward with his feet. A split second later he was winging toward the sky again, a mouse dangling helplessly from deadly claws.
Tomilola lowered her gaze to his, the shadows flitting back into her eyes. “It’s never quite as idyllic as we want to believe, is it?”
He shook his head. “No.”
She exhaled a long sigh. “I don’t actually remember if I heard any of my mother’s calls or not. But that doesn’t mean I didn’t. My mother died seven years ago, and we’d given up on my father coming to our aid a couple years before that. It was a long time ago. But what could possibly have been the point of her lying to me? She needed help. Desperately. We needed help. Why wouldn’t she have called?”
“I don’t know. But from what your dad told me your mom had issues. Ones your dad said kept her from thinking rationally sometimes.”
Pain and anger slashed across her face. “She might have had ‘issues.’ And she might not have always thought ‘rationally,’ but she wasn’t delusional, for pity’s sake. She was together enough that she never turned back on her little girl. Unlike the man you’re trying to paint as a bloody saint.”
“I’m not trying to paint anyone as a saint Least of all your father. God knows, he’d turn over in his grave if he thought I was. I’m just trying to tell his side of the story.”
“Then tell it. But don’t expect me to believe every word out of your mouth.”
“All I’m asking is that you listen with an open mind.”
“Fine, my mind is open.”
If the underlying anger in her words was any indication, her mind wasn’t open. But since it was likely all he’d get, he’d best get to it. “Did your mother ever tell you why he threw her off the estate?”
Her lips twisted in disgust. “Said he found someone new. Someone younger, prettier. Someone without a toddler to take care of.” Pain sounded in her words as she voiced her belief that her father didn’t want her. He locked his gaze on hers. “Your father never considered you anything but the most wonderful of gifts, Tomilola. Never.”
Tears gathered in her eyes. “How would you know? You weren’t. . .”
“No. I wasn’t there. But I know because I saw the pain and longing in your dad’s eyes every time he spoke of you. Heard the pride in his voice when he’d tell one of the memories he had of you. Memories that were old and few, but more precious to him than anything in this world.”
More moisture filled her eyes, but she didn’t let the tears fall. She might want to believe her father had missed her. But the anger underneath those tears told him she didn’t. Not yet. And it would take a lot more talking on Demola’s part before she’d even consider opening her mind. “It wasn’t your father who found someone new, Tomilola. It was your mother.”
“Oh, come on, you can come up with something more original than just flipping the story around, can’t you?”
“Yeah, I probably could if I was making it up. But I’m not making it up. I’m going to tell you exactly what your father told me. No embellishments to make your father sound more innocent. No assumptions about what I think anyone was thinking that night. You’ll have to decide for yourself what you want to believe and what you don’t.”
“Fine. So my mother found someone new Who was that?” Pure sarcasm sounded in her voice.
“I don’t know his name. He was one of your father’s workers.”
“That’s convenient for the story.”
He ignored the comment and pushed on. “It was a Saturday night and your father had let half the workers go early so they could enjoy themselves while he worked late with the other half. When he finally got home, he found you in your crib, Mariam, the housekeeper, watching you, and your mother gone. When he asked Mariam where your mother was, she said she’d headed to town with the first half of the workers. He wasn’t worried at first, too worried, anyway. It wasn’t the first time your mother had gotten impatient with him for being late and headed into town early to drink and dance with some of the workers.”
Her lips pressed into a thin line.
Did that mean she recognized the behavior? And didn’t approve? Wale had said Nike was a big party girl. That she craved attention. Especially male attention. There was no reason that would have changed after she left Wale. In fact, it very possibly could  have gotten worse.
But speculating about what Tomilola was thinking wouldn’t get him anywhere. “When he got to the bar, your mom wasn’t there. Just a bunch of guys doing their best to avoid your dad. When he finally pinned one down, the man reluctantly told him your mom had left with one of the new workers. Supposedly just to check out a bar farther down the street, one that played disco instead of rock music.
To Be Continued…